Major head loss

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known
i am having problem of finding the major loss caused by pipe friction in this question. the formula of major loss is given by fL(V^2) / 2gD , how to get the total length of pipe so that i can gt the major head loss?. Relevant equations

1. The problem statement, all variables and given/known
i am having problem of finding the major loss caused by pipe friction in this question. the formula of major loss is given by fL(V^2) / 2gD , how to get the total length of pipe so that i can gt the major head loss?. Relevant equations

3. The attempt at a solution

The length of pipe is shown at the bottom of the figure, to wit: 120 m of pipe, d = 50 mm

It's not clear that the flow for this system is laminar, which is what the formula 32 μLν / ρg(D2) is for.

You also have a centrifugal pump in the system, which must be treated separately from the rest of the piping and fittings. The pump is not a point of head loss, for example, but it provides a certain amount of head at its outlet to discharge fluid into the remainder of the piping system.

You have hL (expansion) - hL(elbow) immediately after the pump. The hL (elbow) should be the loss for a screwed 90° fitting, but the hL (expansion) should be the hL for an elbow which has an inside diameter of 50 mm (to match the connecting piping) and a bend radius of 300 mm. There should be a formula or table in your text so that you can determine the head loss for this fitting.

so the power required = ρgQ(hL pump)
32 μL(kinematic viscocity) / ρg(D^2) = major loss due to friction in pipe

It's not clear that the flow for this system is laminar, which is what the formula above is for.

It's not clear that the flow for this system is laminar, which is what the formula 32 μLν / ρg(D2) is for.

You also have a centrifugal pump in the system, which must be treated separately from the rest of the piping and fittings. The pump is not a point of head loss, for example, but it provides a certain amount of head at its outlet to discharge fluid into the remainder of the piping system.

You have hL (expansion) - hL(elbow) immediately after the pump. The hL (elbow) should be the loss for a screwed 90° fitting, but the hL (expansion) should be the hL for an elbow which has an inside diameter of 50 mm (to match the connecting piping) and a bend radius of 300 mm. There should be a formula or table in your text so that you can determine the head loss for this fitting.

It's not clear that the flow for this system is laminar, which is what the formula above is for.

that's why i have positive hL(pump)

my hL(expansion ) comes from this part (refer to the picture uploaded) , yes , my hL(elbow ) refers to the head loss due to 90 degree elbow

do you mean beside the hL(expansion) , we should also have also head loss due to the 300mm bend , so we have to find the Kl(coefficient ) from the specific table ? ?

Attached Files:

one more question , is roughness ratio = e / D ? or e only ? P/s : in this question , i was given that the roughness ratio = 0.008 , i am not sure this refer to e or e / D , can someone clarify ?
i need e / D to find the friction factor

one more question , is roughness ratio = e / D ? or e only ? P/s : in this question , i was given that the roughness ratio = 0.008 , i am not sure this refer to e or e / D , can someone clarify ?
i need e / D to find the friction factor

No, it is not.
You haven't provided any text, except what's on the diagram.
The diagram clearly states "300 mm bend radius". The pipe being bent is still d = 50 mm.

There is little point to putting a larger size fitting in the middle of smaller pipe size before and after the fitting.

The headaches of fabrication alone would not recommend this.

the full text is two reservoirs are connected by pipe of 50mm diameter .The water with dynamic viscosity = 10^-7 (m^20 /s is pumped from 1 to 2 at 0.006(m^3) /s . Compute the pump power required with roughness ration = 0.008 .

the full text is two reservoirs are connected by pipe of 50mm diameter .The water with dynamic viscosity = 10^-7 (m^20 /s is pumped from 1 to 2 at 0.006(m^3) /s . Compute the pump power required with roughness ration = 0.008 .

See. There's nothing in this text about any 300 mm diameter pipe. It's the bend radius which is 300 mm, as shown on the diagram.